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© 2008 SOAS Bulletin of Burma Research 1 The Ecology of Burman-Mon Warfare and the Premodern Agrarian State (1383-1425)1 Jon Fernquest Bangkok Post Introduction: the Premodern State Court ritual, political theory, the conduct of warfare, the interpretation of omens, sage advice from wise ministers to kings, as well as many other domains of indigenous knowledge are described in rich detail by the indigenous historical chronicles of Southeast Asia. Indigenous historical chronicles did many things besides chronicle history. The narratives of Burmese and Mon historical chronicles have a strong fictional character. Plot enhancing story elements, often quite melodramatic, range from love, trickery, and chase scenes to supernatural interventions in history and are mixed freely with fact and enliven dry historical detail. The Pali Buddhist literary traditions of India found in story collections such as the Jatakas, the Dhammapada Commentary, or the Mahavamsa Tika are clearly an inspiration if not the source of these historical adornments, an influence made quite explicit in the later Jataka-based explanations of Burmese history in Shin Sandá-lin-ka’s The Treasured Precedents (Maní-yadana-poun, translated by Eun Bagshawe, 1981). A modern historian would quite reasonably not accept these fictional portrayals as pure Rankean factual history. At the same time, the minutiae of military operations and court ritual, described in a precise and non-fictional manner, have the outward appearance of historical documentation. Dry technical military details disqualify much of the narrative as literature, one would think. Therefore, what exactly are these texts? Is the “fiction” found within Burma’s historical texts merely entertainment to be discarded by a serious historian or does it have some deeper significance as, for instance, an intellectual history of ideas that historians wove into the fabric of the history they were writing? And, if so, what period is this intellectual history associated with? The earlier period in which the events are described such as the relatively autonomous Ava period of Burmese history (1368-1551) or from some much later period such as the Kòn- baung period (1752-1885) in which European influence on historical writing is already seen? 1 The present article is a revised version of a paper presented at the conference on Mon history and culture at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok, Thailand; Discovery of Ramanya Desa: History, Identity, Culture, Language and Performing Arts, 10-13 October 2007. The author would like to thank the Siam Society Library, Michael Charney, Donald Stadtner, and Terry Fredrickson for their help and encouragement. © 2008 SOAS Bulletin of Burma Research 70 VOLUME 6 (2008) Finally, can one answer these questions with absolute certainty? To take one extreme example, the debate over whether the literary history of the Greek Iliad corresponds to fact has oscillated from one extreme to another over literally hundreds of years with no absolute certain resolution in sight, disagreement and debate perhaps even being an inherent part of the search for certainty (Strauss 2006, 225-229). Given the wealth of information in indigenous historical chronicles, the question naturally arises why scholars have not used indigenous chronicles more intensively in conceptualizing models of the premodern agrarian Southeast Asian State. The so-called mandala and “galactic polity” models have remained the mainstay in Southeast Asian history for quite some time (see for example Tambiah 1976; Wolters 1999). These dominant models, however, address only a tiny fraction of the many dimensions of the premodern agrarian state. This paper explores the inter-relationships between two understudied dimensions, warfare and the natural environment, of the premodern agrarian state in Burma. Although it is conceivable that small premodern city states such as Bassein or Martaban in Lower Burma owed much of their wealth and food supply to long distance maritime trade (Malacca even relied on rice shipments from Pegu in the early 1500s), most settlements in Burma were highly dependent on local agriculture for their food supply and surplus wealth. One can characterize the premodern states of Burma as “agrarian states” and as such, they should share many characteristics of this general class of states whether they are inside or outside of Southeast Asia. There is no a priori reason why comparisons should be restricted to Southeast Asia, especially given its radically different geographies and natural environments. Agriculture was highly dependent on the local constraints imposed by the natural environment surrounding a settlement. Local agricultural regimes in turn enabled warfare in the premodern state as Perdue (1996, 759) observes for premodern Chinese history: "ultimately the resources of men, food, money, weaponry, and prestige had to be extracted, purchased and produced from the agrarian substructure." In short, a local settlement’s potential for success in warfare was in a large part determined by local environmental constraints. Warfare itself, however, took place outside of the local settlement. Premodern warfare exposed a society to the vicissitudes of nature outside the immediate ecological habitat of the local settlement. Military expeditions had to overcome the impediments of topography, environment, geography, and demography, this can be seen by the great amounts of space in Burmese historical chronicles devoted to: 1. counts of animals mobilized for warfare, 2. the exact routes taken during military campaigns, and most importantly 3. detailed descriptions of situations that arose when there was not enough food during a military campaign, during sieges or after scorched earth. Scholars usually study warfare and the natural environment in isolation from each other. This paper enlists the help of various models and paradigms to help draw the two together conceptually. The factors operative in the premodern state can be broken down into three interacting levels: infrastructure, structure, and superstructure. Infrastructure consists of environment, demography, climate, and agriculture. Structure consists of politics, economics, and social organization. Superstructure consists of 71 SOAS BULLETIN OF BURMA RESEARCH ideology, religion, and political theory (Ferguson 1999). A diagram from Johnson and Earle (2000) describes how these three levels were related: Figure 1 Earle’s Chiefly Power Strategies A hypothetical “ecological chain of causation” is also proposed that links infrastructure to warfare: Environment => Land => Agriculture => Food Supply => => Manpower-Animal Power => Warfare => State Formation Figure 2 Ecological chain of causation in state formation Scholars use formal ecological models such as Turchin (2003) to further elaborate this chain of causation and describe how long-term ecological patterns (Braudel’s longue duree) played out in the short-term events of warfare (histoire evenementuelle). Specifically, this paper looks at a series of conflicts that took place along the middle of the Irrawaddy River in Burma during the period 1389 to 1411. The beginning of the fifteenth century was a special time in Burman and Mon history. Coming almost a century after the decline of Pagan, the period was the subject of the greatest epic of warfare in the Burmese and Mon languages, Rajadhirat, known as Razadarit Ayeidawpon in Burmese. The epic tale of Rajadhirat records the history of a long war between Lower Burma and Upper 72 VOLUME 6 (2008) Burma (c. 1383-1425) which survives to this day in a collection of manuscripts written in three different languages: Mon, Burmese, and Thai (Banyadala; San Lwin; Chao Phraya Khlang 2003). Many of the events recorded in Rajadhirat find correlates in Ù Kalà’s Great Chronicle (Maha-ya-zawin-gyì) (1961, 2006), the first wide- ranging and inclusive royal chronicle of “Myanmar” as the state is referred to in the chronicle itself. Ming Chinese sources such as the Ming Shi-lu (Wade 2005), and sources from coastal Arakan on the border with Bengal also cover some of the same events. There is no standard name for the war discussed in this paper, nor is there agreement on how long the war lasted, or even perhaps whether these disparate conflicts warrant classification as a war at all. Historians have referred to these events in various ways: a. “the grueling north-south wars of the 14th to 16th centuries” Lieberman (2003, 130) b. “the north-south conflicts of 1385-1425” Lieberman (2003, 130) c. The “Burman-Mon wars” Lieberman (2003, 130) d. The “intermittent wars between Pegu and Ava” (1386-1422) (Tun Aung Chain 2002) This paper will refer to these conflicts as the “Ava-Pegu War (1383-1425).” This name and periodization uses the names of the two capitals or political centers, makes the most limited assumptions about the extent of control that these political centers had and avoids over-generalizing the Mon and Burmese ethnic composition of the ruling elite to the diverse populations mobilized during the wars. The starting date for the war coincides with the beginning of Rajadhirat’s succession crisis (see Fernquest 2006a, 5-6). The ending date coincides with the end of military expeditions by Ava into Lower Burma also largely a result of a succession crisis, at Ava in 1426, and subsequent political instability in Upper Burma (See Fernquest 2006b, 55-61). The Great Chronicle and the Rajadhirat epic have a semi-historical nature, combining history, fiction, and lessons on politics in one multi-vocal text. The character of the hero Lagunein in Rajadhirat pushes the fictional theme of heroism to the limit with his continual excessive behavior. In one early episode, the hero refuses fight until the king presents him with his queen. In another episode, the hero enters the bedroom of the enemy king and steals his sword from right under his nose while he sleeps. Later, the hero cannot even keep a planned ambush secret, so eager is he to deride the enemy’s stupidity to their face. For this, the hero is to suffer the death penalty, but is given a chance to redeem himself by further heroic deeds and in the act of doing so suffers a proper heroic death in battle (Fernquest 2006a).

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